I would first suggest that you look back at your past reviews (such as this low quality review) and consider the expected quality of posts. You should be making the same edits in help and improvement that you would in other queues... but offering more guidance as to why you are making these edits.
For example, this first post needs some action and should be improved (and consideration if it is even on topic for Stack Overflow - or if it is high enough quality that it should be flagged for migration to another stack exchange site). If you feel that no action is needed on posts of this quality, I am not sure that you should be delving into the Help and Improvement queue too far.
You should make sure the post is well written, well formatted, clear. If English is not your primary language or you use it in an informal way (making use of 'i' rather than 'I' and not starting the sentence with a capital letter), I would strongly suggest sending the text of the question you are looking at through an online grammar checker such as Spell Check Plus which can help you with identifying various things to fix. If someone else is apologizing for the poor English, correct it.
The resulting question should be written as if it was done by a competent technical writer. Colloquialisms and other informalities should not be present in the question. The first part of the question should clearly identify the problem (as it is the summary for the question that is shown on the front page). The title should match the body (or vice versa) and the tags should be appropriate.